To: peter_luc who wrote (67594 ) 1/12/2002 1:52:14 AM From: milo_morai Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 275872 <font color=green>Some recent Hammer news gnu.org Welcome to the GCC home page! In April 1999, the egcs steering committee was appointed by the FSF as the official GNU maintainer for GCC. At that time GCC was renamed from the "GNU C Compiler" to the "GNU Compiler Collection" and received a new mission statement. Currently GCC contains front ends for C, C++, Objective C, Chill, Fortran, and Java as well as libraries for these languages (libstdc++, libgcj,...). The next major release, GCC 3.1, will also include an Ada front end. We want to work closely with developers to help and encourage them to contribute changes for inclusion in GCC. We thus provide access to our development sources with weekly snapshots and anonymous CVS. We will provide regular, high quality releases. We want those releases to work well on a variety of native (including GNU/Linux) and cross targets and use an extensive test suite as well as various benchmark suites and automated testers to maintain and improve quality. GCC 3.0.3 is the current release. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- News/AnnouncementsJanuary 8, 2002 SuSE Labs developers Jan Hubicka, Bo Thorsen and Andreas Jaeger have contributed a port to the AMD x86-64 architecture. For more information on x86-64 see x86-64.org . December 20, 2001 GCC 3.0.3 has been released. November 3, 2001 Hans-Peter Nilsson has contributed a port to MMIX, the CPU architecture used in new editions of Donald E. Knuth's The Art of Computer Programming. October 25, 2001 GCC 3.0.2 has been released. October 11, 2001 Axis Communications has contributed its port to the CRIS CPU architecture, used in the ETRAX system-on-a-chip series. See developer.axis.com for technical information. October 5, 2001 Alexandre Oliva of Red Hat has generalized the tree inlining infrastructure, formerly in the C++ front-end, so that it is now used in the C front end too. October 2, 2001 Ada Core Technologies, Inc, has contributed its GNAT Ada 95 front end and associated tools. The GNAT compiler fully implements the Ada language as defined by the ISO/IEC 8652 standard. September 11, 2001 Roman Lechtchinsky, Technische Universität Berlin, has donated support for the Cray T3E platform. August 29, 2001 Jan Hubicka, SuSE Labs, together with Richard Henderson, Red Hat, and Andreas Jaeger, SuSE Labs, has contributed infrastructure for profile driven optimizations.